Galaga: Destination Earth

Last updated
Galaga: Destination Earth
Galaga - Destination Earth Coverart.png
European PlayStation cover art
Developer(s) King of the Jungle
Pipe Dream Interactive (GBC)
Publisher(s) Hasbro Interactive
Majesco Entertainment (GBC)
Series Galaxian
Platform(s) Windows, PlayStation, Game Boy Color
ReleaseWindows
  • NA: September 23, 2000
PlayStation
  • UK: September 23, 2000
  • NA: October 22, 2000
  • EU: November 10, 2000
Game Boy Color
  • NA: September 25, 2000
Genre(s) Shooter
Mode(s) Single-player

Galaga: Destination Earth, known in the Game Boy Color version as Galaga, is a 2000 3D video game, an update to the popular Golden Age arcade game, Galaga . It was developed by King of the Jungle and published by Hasbro Interactive and Majesco Entertainment for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation, and Game Boy Color.

Contents

Destination Earth includes nine stages, each consisting of several "waves" of alien attackers and bonus waves. Most of the stages are planetary locations, like an Ancient Egyptianish Mars, Metropolitan Earth, and Saturn. Some are non-planet astronomical objects like the moon or the sun. On the final stage, the player finds must battle on a "planetoid". The "waves" consist of three preset views denoted as ALPHA (1st person), DELTA (side scroller), and GAMMA (top view or original Galaga view).

If a tractor beam ship is destroyed, there is a chance that a cube will come out. If the player catches this cube, they will get a temporary tractor beam that can capture an enemy ship. Captured enemy ships will then act as wing-men for your fighter until destroyed by enemy fire, just as they do in Gaplus.

Reception

The Windows and PlayStation versions received "mixed" reviews according to the review aggregation website Metacritic. [1] [2] Jeff Lundrigan of NextGen said of the latter version, "Despite the nostalgia factor, this seems to be aimed at the mass market, not the hardcore. As such, it's relatively simple and not that thrilling." [14]

Notes

  1. In GameFan 's viewpoint of the PlayStation version, three critics gave it each a score of 70, 53, and 47.

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References

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